Sunday, May 9, 2010

Mike Maloney Silver at $100 oz CNBC 4-2010

Mike Maloney says Silver at $100 /oz is a no brainer on CNBC 4-2010


Lost Star - Walter Cruttenden

Dark Star Companion



Walter Cruttenden, author of Lost Star of Myth and Time(1), discussed scientific proof of how mankind's consciousness goes through cycles based on a dark star companion to the sun.



Battle for Canada Oil

May 09, 2010 — The tar sands in the province of Alberta cover a wide area centered on the town of Fort McMurray. They lie in the heart of Canada's Boreal forests, and produce close to one-and-a-half million barrels of oil a day.

The area is the epicentre of a struggle between environmentalists and multinational energy companies, with each side painting different pictures of how oil extraction impacts the region.

Al Jazeera's Steve Chao reports from Fort McMurray, Canada

The world is running out of Silver says Richard Daughty

Richard Daughty : Silver is the Biggest Screaming buy right now - Goldseek Radio


May 09, 2010
Richard Daughty, who describes himself as "the angriest guy in economics, is writer/publisher of The Mogambo Guru economic newsletter and a general partner and COO for Smith Consultant Group, serving the financial and medical communities. Prior to joining Smith, Daughty was a financial adviser to American Express Financial Advisers in Clearwater, Florida. He holds an MBA in operations research from the University of South Florida and is a strong advocate for sound fiscal and monetary policy. His comments appear frequently in such fine publications as GoldSeek.com, the Daily Reckoning and Barrons.

Job Market vs. Stock Market

May 08, 2010Rebecca Jarvis talks to Anthony Mason, CBS News Business Correspondent and Michael Santoli, Senior Editor, Barron's about the current state of the stock market and its effect on jobs.


Bob Chapman on The Economy Collapse

Editor and publisher of The International Forecaster, Bob Chapman, discussed the economic crisis, how brokerage firms such as Goldman Sachs played a part in
fueling the collapse, and where he sees the economy heading into the future. He dismissed news that the economic crisis may be abating. Instead, Chapman
said, we are merely seeing a "barrage of government propaganda, the psy ops that go on everyday, convincing people that everything is going to be okay."


He decried the use of derivatives by large firms like Goldman Sachs and alleged that their nefarious activity goes even further than that. According to
Chapman, these companies pay a fee to have their automated trading computers positioned closest to the central computer of the New York Stock Exchange,
which processes incoming and outgoing trades. "Because of its proximity, in nanoseconds," Chapman explained, the computers, and thus the firms, become
"privy to orders before anybody else is and they are able to counteract what is going on with the orders, in order to make a larger profit."

Looking ahead to the future, Chapman foresaw the further devaluing of the dollar, estimating that over the course of the next two to three years,
"it will lose two thirds of its value versus other currencies." He was skeptical about a one world currency, but did suggest the possibility that one could
be created "for trading purposes only." This specialized currency would allow for countries to keep their own internal monetary systems. Perhaps most
troubling, he was adamant that the financial crisis will lead to a global war, saying "you can take that to the bank, if the bank is still there."
DAILY NEWS ON BOOZE